Crazy Muscle Three-Atine Review — Why 3 Kinds of Creatine?

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Crazy Muscle is a supplement company that was founded in 2003 with a pretty clear focus on bodybuilding. Most of their products are about gaining muscle or cutting fat, but they take something of a ‘big picture’ approach to the sport and their site is full of blog posts about managing your mental health, your relationships, and other lifestyle factors.

Their creatine supplement is unusual not just because it comes in pill form, but because it combines three different kinds of creatine. Let’s take a closer look at the reasons why.

Crazy Muscle Three-Atine Ingredients

Each pill contains just over 5 grams of creatine: 4.8 grams of creatine monohydrate, 150 milligrams of creatine pyruvate, and 51 milligrams of creatine alphaketoglutarate.

An interesting addition is croscarmellose sodium, an ingredient that may help with absorption in the intestines. It’s often included in prescription medications for this purpose.

The pills also include magnesium stearate, a “flow agent” that’s just there to help make sure the ingredients don’t stick to the machinery in the facility in which it’s made.

Finally, these come in a solid pill form, not encased in gelatin like some competitors. To help the pills stick together there’s vegetable stearic acid and pharmaceutical glaze, which extends shelf life and helps to protect the pills from moisture.

It’s worth pointing out that the lack of gelatin means that unlike many creatine capsules, this a vegetarian-friendly product. However, it’s not vegan: pharmaceutical glaze is made from the leftover cocoons of an Asian insect called the lac. If you don’t like consuming insect secretions — say, you’re against consuming honey — then this may be off limits for you.

Crazy Muscle Three-Atine Ingredients

Crazy Muscle Three-Atine Benefits & Effectiveness

So, what’s up with these forms of creatine? There are 5.001 grams of creatine all together, a supplement that’s strongly linked to muscle power output, endurance, and hypertrophy, and the vast majority of it — 4.8 grams of it — is creatine monohydrate. This is the most popular and most widely researched form of creatine, so one can be pretty confident that it will produce the effects listed above. (Five grams is a standard serving size.)

The other forms of creatine have a lot less research behind them. Let’s start with creatine pyruvate, which is creatine that’s been bound with pyruvic acid. Crazy Muscle state on their website that creatine pyruvate is “stronger than monohydrate,” but there’s very little evidence to support this. One study suggested that taking some creatine pyruvate may result in more plasma creatine in the blood, but that doesn’t necessarily mean more creatine went to the muscles or that it results in better performance. (In fact, it may mean the opposite: that less creatine went to the muscles than usual and more of it wound up in the plasma.) Some research suggests that pyruvate is better for endurance, but others conclude that it isn’t.

Crazy Muscle Three-Atine Review

There’s not a ton of evidence to suggest that creatine pyruvate is superior to creatine monohydrate and the same goes for creatine alphaketoglutarate, which has even less research behind it.

That’s not to say that these two kinds of creatine are inferior to monohydrate; they’re probably about as useful as each other. And even if they were inferior, there’s still 4.8 grams of regular monohydrate, which is a perfectly useful amount. What we’re saying is that the claim that this is a superior product because it has two extra kinds of creatine doesn’t have much evidence behind it.

That said, there is good evidence that the croscarmellose sodium helps with absorption, and I was pleased to see it in the contents.

This product is also made in a GMP facility, which stands for Good Manufacturing Practices. GMP facilities need to abide by certain regulations enforced by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration that help ensure purity of the product. That said, it hasn’t been tested by a third party tester like BCMG or Informed Choice, an extra layer of quality control that some products enforce. Crazy Muscle also point out that this product may contain allergens like wheat, peanuts, and/or shellfish.

Crazy Muscle Three-Atine Price

This costs $14.50 for 30 servings of 3 tablets. That’s 48 cents per serving or 9.6 cents per gram of creatine. That’s pretty expensive for creatine; it’s not hard to find a competitor that’s closer to 4 to 6 cents per gram. The extra cost is presumably due to the three kinds of creatine and the process that’s required to make a solid pill. If you’re really excited about these novel kinds of creatine, the cost may be worth it to you.

The Takeaway

There are plenty of pros to this product: the croscarmellose might boost absorption, it’s more portable than powder — making it easy to take a fistful to the gym or on the road — it’s made in a GMP facility, and unlike most pills it’s vegetarian-friendly, albeit not vegan.

I’m not convinced that the three kinds of creatine make this a superior product to plain creatine monohydrate. But all those advantages listed above may make you happy to pay the extra money nonetheless.

Crazy Muscle Three-Atine

Per Serving: $0.96

7.3

Ingredients

6.9/10

Effectiveness

9.0/10

Price

6.0/10

Pros

Croscarmellose may boost absorption

Made in GMP facility

Vegetarian (though not vegan)

Cons

Nick is a content producer and journalist with over seven years’ experience reporting on four continents. His first articles about health were on a cholera outbreak in rural Kenya while he was reporting for a French humanitarian organization. His next writing job was covering the nightlife scene in Shanghai. He’s written on a lot of things.

After Shanghai, he went on to produce a radio documentary about bodybuilding in Australia before finishing his Master’s degrees in Journalism and International Relations and heading to New York City. Here, he’s been writing on health full time for more than five years for outlets like BarBend, Men's Health, VICE, and Popular Science.

No fan of writing in the third person, Nick’s passion for health stems from an interest in self improvement: How do we reach our potential?

Questions like these took him through a lot of different areas of health and fitness like gymnastics, vegetarianism, kettlebell training, fasting, CrossFit, Paleo, and so on, until he realized (or decided) that strength training fit best with the ideas of continuous, measurable self improvement.

At BarBend his writing focuses a little more on nutrition and long-form content with a heaping dose of strength training. His underlying belief is in the middle path: you don’t have to count every calorie and complete every workout in order to benefit from a healthy lifestyle and a stronger body. Plus, big traps are cool.

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